Sløtface: Love, heartache and family
"Why be good enough when you could be a success?" snarls Haley Shea on the very opening line of Sløtface's second record, her vocals isolated before the...
"Why be good enough when you could be a success?" snarls Haley Shea on the very opening line of Sløtface's second record, her vocals isolated before the track explodes with the livewire electricity that fans of the Norwegian pop-punk quartet have come to love and expect.
As an album opener, 'S.U.C.C.E.S.S.' is the perfect reintroduction to Sløtface; wrapped up in that fizzing energy is a strong social conscience, a fierce polemic against the idea that women or immigrants have to work harder to prove they're good enough. It's an issue that's close to Haley's heart, and sets the tone for the rest of 'Sorry for the Late Reply', which deftly combines the personal with the political.
"Going into this record, I decided to push myself to be more specific, and the best way to do that was to tell stories about things I've experienced," Haley explains. "I approached the band with the idea of making a more personal record about growing up in Norway as an American citizen with American parents."





